Skip to content

Sa Headline

Menu
  • Home
  • news
  • music
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact us
Menu

Glow of Mandela Day is dimming in a harsher world

Posted on July 22, 2025

Twelve years after his death, Mandela’s legacy risks being reduced to performative charity and forgotten T-shirts.

It was in 2009 that the call to do 67 minutes for Mandela on the great man’s birthday, 18 July, first sounded.

It seemed a bizarre number, hardly long enough to paint a classroom, much less tend a food garden but perfect if you were packing food – or posing for a pic in the local newspaper.

And there was plenty of that. Mandela Day became the bane of every newspaper editor and news editor in the country, from the big mainstream dailies to the knockand-drops, with secretaries and PRs demanding coverage.

It was ubiquitous.

People even summited Kilimanjaro on Madiba’s birthday, ostensibly to keep the girl in school by drawing attention to the dearth of sanitary products that would keep girls at home, rather than face the embarrassment of being in class during their period.

ALSO READ: Gauteng Hospitals achieve record 806 surgeries on Mandela Day

Much of the public displays of piety, charity and Ubuntu were performative and public – flying right in the face of the Good Book’s injunction to keep alms deeds private.

But much of it was real.

The glow might have faded from the faces of school kids when the celebs left and the TV camera lights were doused, but at least they were left with (delete as applicable) new libraries/ painted classrooms/planted food gardens/JoJo tanks/new shoes/ stationery kits.

Mandela has been gone 12 years, come December, and the momentum for 67 minutes, codified to represent a minute for each year of his life that he dedicated to public service, seems to have stuttered a bit.

There are still the old stagers drawn like fading moths to the guttering candle light of a pic in the local newspaper (or self-published on LinkedIn and cross-pollinated by eager staffers on their Facebook and X accounts), but the wave that was once a tsunami of self-congratulation certainly seems to have ebbed.

ALSO READ: Mlindo The Vocalist releases his long-awaited album on Mandela Day as a way of ‘giving back’

It’s a pity.

It doesn’t matter what the motivation was to take part in Mandela Day – and literally getting the T-shirt – the recipients benefited.

But it’s not surprising if less good works are being done, because the world is a far harsher, crueller place than it was in Madiba’s day.

It’s manifestly more selfish and graphically more unequal and the vulnerable are at even greater risk.

You don’t even see people wearing their Mandela Day T-shirts any more – even if it is just once a year. We are poorer for that – all of us. Tata Madiba deserved better.

NOW READ: WATCH: Pandor calls on world leaders to be good ‘troublemakers’ like Madiba

Source link

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • WATCH LIVE | Senzo Meyiwa murder trail continues
  • Schools reopen: here’s when prelims start for matrics
  • Life with a Mini Countryman SE ALL4
  • Tshwane hands over title deeds to Stinkwater residents
  • AI systems from Google and OpenAI soar at global maths competition

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024

Categories

  • music
  • news
©2025 Sa Headline | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme